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National Progressive Front (Iraq) : ウィキペディア英語版
National Progressive Front (Iraq)

The National Progressive Front ((アラビア語:الجبهة الوطنية التقدمية), ''al-Jabha al-Wataniyyah at-Taqaddumiyyah'', NPF, sometimes known as the Progressive Patriotic and National Front) was an Iraqi Popular Front announced on 16 July 1973 and constituted in 1974, ostensibly formed within the framework of a "joint action programme" to establish a coalition between the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party, the Iraqi Communist Party, the Kurdistan Revolutionary Party, a pro-government section of the Kurdish Democratic Party, and miscellaneous independents. The Iraqi Communist Party were removed from the NPF in 1979 while the Kurdish Democratic Party suffered restrictions when Saddam Hussein came to power after 1979. The creation of the Front ensured the leading role of the Ba'athists in state and society whilst allowing limited autonomy for other participating parties loyal to the government. Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein spoke of it once as "one of the essential forms to voice our will and to deepen democracy and political participation of the people and the national forces in building the new experiment in all fields."〔Bhim Singh. ''Iraq: A Heroic Resistance''. New Delhi: Har-Anand Publications. 2001. p. 245.〕 In effect the Front was controlled and maintained solely by the Ba'ath, with all other legal political forces acting in subservience to it.〔Muhammad Faour. ''The Arab World After Desert Storm''. Washington, D.C.: US Institute of Peace Press. 1993. pp. 40-41.〕
Its origins lay in July 1970 when the government under Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr, amid fighting the militant Iraqi Communist Party (Central Command) and dealing with Kurdish separatist militancy, offered the formation of the Front to moderate sections of the Iraqi Communists under conditions guaranteeing Ba'athist dominance over the state and political exclusivity within the armed forces.〔Nazih N. Ayubi. ''Over-Stating the Arab state: Politics and Society in the Middle East''. London: I.B.Tauris. 1996. p 424.〕 To quell Kurdish separatist sentiment an autonomy agreement was agreed to in 1970 to create Iraqi Kurdistan while attempts were made to get the Kurdistan Democratic Party to join the Front in the 1973-1974 period.〔Mahboob Alam. ''Iraqi Foreign Policy Since Revolution'' Second Ed. 1995. New Delhi: Mittal Publications. pp. 25-26.〕 This resulted in a majority section led by Mustafa Barzani continuing to rebel against the state while a smaller faction joined the Front.〔David McDowall. ''A Modern History of the Kurds'' Third Rev. Ed. London: I.B.Tauris. 2004. p. 337.〕
The Iraqi Communists, despite entry into the Front, continued to experience repression such as the arrest of factory members, execution of members within the armed forces, and strong censorship of the ICP's daily newspaper.〔Tariq Ali. ''Bush in Babylon: the Recolonisation of Iraq''. London: Verso. 2004. p. 118, 121.〕 By 1979 the leadership of the ICP was either arrested or in exile, with the party itself formally withdrawing from the Front by 1980 to openly oppose the government.〔Taru Bahl and M.H. Syed (Ed.). ''Encyclopaedia of the Muslim World''. New Delhi: Anmol Publications. 2003. p. 180.〕 In the 1995-2000 period a small pro-government Iraqi Communist Party led by Yusuf Hamdan was proclaimed and its existence was tolerated, though it was not a formal member of the Front.〔Ilario Salucci. ''A People's History of Iraq: The Iraqi Communist Party, Workers' Movements and the Left, 1924-2004''. Chicago, IL: Haymarket Books. 2005. p. 103.〕
Upon the formation of Iraq's National Assembly in 1980 the Front was tasked with nominating candidates to stand in elections.〔Dieter Nohlen, Florian Grotz and Christof Hartmann (Ed.). ''Elections in Asia and the Pacific: A Data Handbook'' Volume I. New York: Oxford University Press. 2001. p. 88.〕 Throughout its existence the Secretary General of the Front was Naim Haddad. It was disbanded in 2003 following the overthrow of the Ba'athist Government in the Iraq War.〔''The Europa World Year Book 2004'' Volume I. London: Taylor & Francis. 2004. p. 2200.〕
==See also==

*National Progressive Front (Syria)

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